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Main Authors: Feng, Xueyun, Löytynoja, Ari, Merilä, Juha
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Molecular ecology 2025
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Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40485047/
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author Feng, Xueyun
Löytynoja, Ari
Merilä, Juha
author_facet Feng, Xueyun
Löytynoja, Ari
Merilä, Juha
Feng, Xueyun
Löytynoja, Ari
Merilä, Juha
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Estimating Recent and Historical Effective Population Size of Marine and Freshwater Sticklebacks. Feng, Xueyun Löytynoja, Ari Merilä, Juha Animals Smegmamorpha Genetics, Population Population Density Fresh Water Gene Flow Models, Genetic Effective population size (N) is a quantity of central importance in evolutionary biology and population genetics, but often notoriously challenging to estimate. Analyses of N are further complicated by the many interpretations of the concept and the alternative approaches to quantify N utilising different properties of the data. Each method is also informative over different time scales, suggesting that a combination of approaches should allow piecing together the entire continuum of N, spanning from the recent to more distant past. To test this in practice, we inferred the N continuum for 45 populations of nine-spined sticklebacks (Pungitius pungitius) using whole-genome data with both LD- and coalescent-based methods. Our results show that marine populations exhibit the highest N values in contemporary, recent, and historical times, followed by coastal and freshwater populations. The results also demonstrate the impact of both recent and historical gene flow on N estimates and show that simple summary statistics are informative in comprehending the events in the very recent past and aid in more accurate estimation of , the contemporary N, as well as in reconstruction and interpretation of recent demographic histories. Although our sample size for each large population is limited, we found that GONE can provide reasonable N estimates. However, due to challenges in detecting subtle genetic drift in large populations, these estimates may represent the lower bound of N. Finally, we show that combining GONE and CurrentNe2, both sensitive to population structure, with MSMC2 provides a meaningful interpretation of N dynamics over time.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_40485047
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher Molecular ecology
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Estimating Recent and Historical Effective Population Size of Marine and Freshwater Sticklebacks.
Feng, Xueyun
Löytynoja, Ari
Merilä, Juha
Animals
Smegmamorpha
Genetics, Population
Population Density
Fresh Water
Gene Flow
Models, Genetic
Estimating Recent and Historical Effective Population Size of Marine and Freshwater Sticklebacks. Feng, Xueyun Löytynoja, Ari Merilä, Juha Animals Smegmamorpha Genetics, Population Population Density Fresh Water Gene Flow Models, Genetic Effective population size (N) is a quantity of central importance in evolutionary biology and population genetics, but often notoriously challenging to estimate. Analyses of N are further complicated by the many interpretations of the concept and the alternative approaches to quantify N utilising different properties of the data. Each method is also informative over different time scales, suggesting that a combination of approaches should allow piecing together the entire continuum of N, spanning from the recent to more distant past. To test this in practice, we inferred the N continuum for 45 populations of nine-spined sticklebacks (Pungitius pungitius) using whole-genome data with both LD- and coalescent-based methods. Our results show that marine populations exhibit the highest N values in contemporary, recent, and historical times, followed by coastal and freshwater populations. The results also demonstrate the impact of both recent and historical gene flow on N estimates and show that simple summary statistics are informative in comprehending the events in the very recent past and aid in more accurate estimation of , the contemporary N, as well as in reconstruction and interpretation of recent demographic histories. Although our sample size for each large population is limited, we found that GONE can provide reasonable N estimates. However, due to challenges in detecting subtle genetic drift in large populations, these estimates may represent the lower bound of N. Finally, we show that combining GONE and CurrentNe2, both sensitive to population structure, with MSMC2 provides a meaningful interpretation of N dynamics over time.
title Estimating Recent and Historical Effective Population Size of Marine and Freshwater Sticklebacks.
topic Animals
Smegmamorpha
Genetics, Population
Population Density
Fresh Water
Gene Flow
Models, Genetic
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40485047/